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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)AI
Posts
12
Comments
125
Joined
12 mo. ago

  • There are already some communities with the same tooic, but without much interaction, so I was mainly refering to joining existing ones.

    However, even if that happens, one can simply go ahead and create a new community with normal mod behavior.

  • That fragmentation annoyed me too at the beginning, until somenoe tokd me something along the lines.

    "It's like different reddit subs with each hsving their own mods and rules"...

    So /c/gaming on instance A, and /c/gaming on instance B, would be like /r/gaming and /r/gamingfornoobs.

  • That is what I already do. But I feel like there isn't much going on. Tbh, I'm more of a passive than active participant. Never been a "karma whore".

    I mostly scroll through the feed and chime into topics where I feel I can contribute to.

  • Reddit took the time to get these communities going...

    Sure! But, in this case Lemmy is literally a federated copypasta of Reddit, like Madtodon is of X.

    Therefore, I think Lemmy is already a few steps ahead, due to the existing familiarity how communities/subs are supposed to be used.

    So it's not we're starting from scratch... It's just getting rid of the annoyances of Reddit.

    Take Mastodon/BlueSky as an example. People are already familiar withbthe concept of how to use it.

  • Lol... It is indeed common knowledge... I was just joking.

    Using Teams as a freelancer with multiple clients who roll their own user management is a PITA.

    I had to sign into multiple browsers in private mode